The New Lords of the Ring Tone
Why Americans are hanging up on the Baby Bells.

By Daniel Gross
Slate.com

Posted Thursday, Oct. 6, 2005, at 1:42 PM PT

http://www.slate.com/id/2127617/


In the 1990s, tech gurus like George "Infinite 
Bandwidth" Gilder rhapsodized that with the 
roll-out of fiber-optic cable, the price of 
making phone calls and sending e-mails would fall 
inexorably to zero. The investment thesis: Go 
long the New Economy start-ups like Global 
Crossing and short the incumbent Baby Bells. 
After all, Verizon, BellSouth, and their sad 
siblings were under assault from all directions. 
Portable wireless phones were going to displace 
land lines. Juggernauts like Worldcom/MCI would 
eat the Baby Bells' lunch in long-distance. Cable 
companies would use their fat pipes to deliver 
high-speed voice and data to the home. And these 
legacy companies, with their large bureaucracies 
and unionized workforces, wouldn't be able to respond.

Gilder's promise of infinite bandwidth was more 
like infinite jest. Companies like PSINet, Global 
Crossing, and 360 Networks piled on debt to build 
out telecom infrastructure and lay millions of 
miles of fiber-optic cable. But in a cycle 
reminiscent of the boom and busts that surrounded 
the telegraph and railroad, we got a glut of 
cable and vicious price competition. By late 
2001, just 5 percent of the U.S. fiber-optic 
capacity was in use. Bankruptcy and consolidation quickly followed.

While the Baby Bells have suffered, as this 
five-year chart of the stocks of Verizon, SBC, 
BellSouth, and Qwest shows, they survived the 
meltdown. Consumers and businesses continued to 
pay their phone bills, and the companies (Qwest 
excepted) continued to pay their dividends. And 
they've been leading the consolidation. So far 
this year, as Forbes notes, SBC has agreed to buy 
AT&T, and Verizon bought MCI. And all the Baby 
Bells are furiously marketing DSL high-speed 
Internet connections. Collectively, the four 
companies are worth close to $190 billion.

But just as it was too soon to declare the Baby 
Bells dead in the 1990s, it may be too soon to 
declare them the victors in this decade. The 
price of making phone calls or accessing the 
Internet may not be going to zero. But a slew of 
developments in recent weeks suggests that it 
will be getting closer to zero than the erstwhile 
Baby Bells would like. And if current trends 
escalate, it won't be too long before kids regard 
telephone jacks the way us thirtysomethings used 
to look at the giant console radios in our grandparents' basements.

The one telecom sector Baby Bells dominate is the 
land-line business—the phone in your home. But 
despite spotty service and dead zones, cell 
phones may slowly be displacing land lines. 
Today's twentysomethings have come of age talking 
on portable wireless handsets. Why bother with 
the expense and hassle of a Verizon installation 
if you're going to move in a year? The Wall 
Street Journal yesterday noted that a Manhattan 
landlord who owns a few dozen buildings didn't 
even bother to install standard phone jacks when 
he renovated many of his apartments.

For a growing number of people, the personal 
computer is becoming the telephone. Until a few 
weeks ago, 3-year-old Skype was another one of 
those quirky Scandinavian tech stories and a 
great example of a viral marketing. Some 54 
million people had downloaded the software that 
allows users to speak to one another free of 
charge via the Internet. But in September, when 
eBay, another valuable business built on the 
wreckage of the 1990s fiber-optic infrastructure 
boom, decided to cough up $2.6 billion in cash 
and stock for Skype, the company became a serious 
player. If just a fraction of eBay buyers and 
sellers start using Skype instead of their local 
phone company, it would be a huge blow to the Baby Bells.

Last month, Vonage, the venture-capital-fueled 
Voice Over Internet Protocol company that, like 
Skype, is turning fiber-optics into a cheap 
telephone network, announced it had added its 
millionth line. That's rapid growth, considering 
it had just 400,000 subscribers in January. And 
there's likely more to come. In August, the Daily 
Deal and others reported that Vonage was 
preparing an initial public offering of between 
$400 million and $600 million. Oh, and big cable 
companies like Time Warner and Cablevision have 
made slower (but still notable) headway at 
signing up customers for VoIP telephone service.

Taken together, the numbers of VoIP phone 
customers aren't huge. But this is a zero-sum 
game. Every customer added by Time Warner, Skype, 
or Vonage is one lost by Verizon or SBC. And 
although none of these services is close to 
free—even with Skype, you have to pay for 
services that allow you to make calls out of the 
network—these services don't have to be free to 
hurt the Baby Bells badly. The start-ups can 
undercut them on price because they don't have 
the same infrastructure costs—pensions and 
buildings, wires and switching stations.

The Baby Bells have tried to combat potential 
shrinkage of the land-line business by 
diversifying into wireless, DSL, and Internet 
service. But these areas are problematic, too. 
Cable modems are significantly more popular than 
DSL service. And the emerging area of wireless 
Internet access isn't shaping up as a growth area 
for the Baby Bells either. Building citywide 
wi-fi networks is a capital-intensive business, 
and the returns are uncertain. So, the Baby Bells 
haven't exactly been rushing to build wi-fi 
networks on spec. Which means they've left a 
vacuum for others. And here again, the new 
entrants are driving the price down. Earlier this 
week, Philadelphia hired Earthlink to build its 
wi-fi network, which should be completed late 
next year. The service won't be free: Poor people 
will pay $10 per month and others will pay $20 
per month. And the news flow just keeps getting 
worse. Last week, it was reported that Google is 
interested in building a free wi-fi network that 
would cover all of San Francisco. With a cash 
hoard of $7.1 billion (and rising), Google has 
the ability to build free wi-fi networks wherever it wishes.

The rampant innovation and investment in cheap 
and potentially free voice and data services have 
left the Baby Bells on the defensive. They're 
left lobbying state legislatures to forbid the 
construction of municipal wi-fi networks, as SBC 
did in Texas (the effort failed), and pushing 
yesterday's technologies at ever-lower prices.

When eBay announced its acquisition of Skype, 
many analysts wondered how it could be that a 
company with 2004 revenues of only $7 million 
could be worth $2.6 billion. More analysts should 
wonder how Verizon can be worth $86 billion.



=================================================
George Antunes                    Voice (713) 743-3923
Associate Professor               Fax   (713) 743-3927
Political Science                    Internet: antunes at uh dot edu
University of Houston
Houston, TX 77204-3011          


Reply with a "Thank you" if you liked this post.

_______________________________________________

MEDIANEWS mailing list
medianews@twiar.org

To unsubscribe send an email to:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to